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Old 04-27-2003, 11:40 AM   #11
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Default Re: Re: Why is Jesus historicity Important? Or, how I do apologetics

Quote:
Originally posted by Koyaanisqatsi
You mean something like this:


And let's not forget your ending:

Yeah, there's no deity involved in any of that carefully-worded-to-avoid-any-direct-links nonsense.

Well, again you display how much you don't know, since if you'll recall in that thread, I granted you the existence of a Rabbi named Jesus and his collection of wisdom sayings that the mythology of the christian cult was loosely based upon.

And here you've taken it upon yourself to explain that you don't believe in the deity of Jesus at the same time you speak about the "transformative" effects of reading his words and how it "mediates transcendence through Grace."

Your evasions and obfuscation grow ever more transparent, sir, since absent a divinity of Jesus, he would just be yet another teacher like all other teachers throughout history (and a horrible one at that, since he didn't actually teach anything, he just threatened for non-compliance) and therefore no "transcendence through Grace" could be possible or any person on this planet who ever says anything regarding a god or gods would ipso facto mean "transcendance through Grace."

You keep maintaining that the bible is the word of god which is no longer permissable for you to do. Sorry, I have decreed it and since I have been a teacher and certainly speak about god an awful lot, by reading my words you will receive "transcendence through Grace."

It's just as stupid and utterly baseless as what is written in your book.
You do know that history and theology are not the same thing, correct?

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Old 04-27-2003, 12:48 PM   #12
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Originally posted by Fenton Mulley
Have you ever been to Texas? The people there seem to be totally unaware of what you just said.

I'm from Texas, and a WHOLE lot of folks are aware of what he said. they just don't want to cause "family trouble" by coming out and saying it openly.
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Old 04-27-2003, 12:58 PM   #13
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Arrow Liberation Theology

Quote:
Originally posted by Vorkosigan
All religions aspire to do three things:

1) to deliniate the Human problematic

2) To resolve the problematic with a trnasformative experience

3) To mediate the transformation.


Meta, religions are social structures that aspire to power and control; to secure resources, sex, wealth, and devotees in ever larger numbers. You've just delineated the axis of invasion, not the objectives of "religion."



Meta =>So to you all religion is a conspiracy? So you got hold of some Fuererbach and you think you have a bold new innovative idea? I was an atheist, I was a Marxist, I was an anti-war protester agains the vietnam war when I was 12 years old. I worked in the central Amreica solidiarty movement for eight years. I've read more Marx, Troski, Furerbach, Gramsci, and Mandel than you will ever read. Obviously I've thought about it.

But there is a subtext to relgious history that you are just ignoring. It's just as elaborate and just as pwerful, and deserves to be thoguht of as the religious legacy of the west as does the other. That one includes Dorothy Day (Catholic worker movment) and Albert Schweitzher, and Shindler and all the other chrisitaians who gave their lives to eliviating suffering and fighting tyranny. So that is groundless and peranoid charge.

To accept Jesus, to accept God's grace through the mediation of Christ's atonement is transformative and offers a power for living which resolves the basic human problematic. The proof of that is in actually doing it, actually receiving it, not in historical arguments.

Quote:
If the proof is in the actual doing, then it's no problem, Meta. We look at the brutality, inhumanity, authoritarianism and ethical nihilism of Christian belief and behavior, and we have the proof we need.


Meta => the glass is half full!why do you refuse to look at the Christians of Lo Chambo who gave their lives to hide Jews from the Nazis?

It works, and the proof that it works is in the pudding. Because it works we can be fairly sure that the testimony given is accurate

Quote:
Christianity doesn't "work." It has failed completely in Europe, and in the US, the worst places to live are by and large the most Christian. Christianity is only growing in the Third World and the East, where educational systems and social resources are not rich enough to give people some historical perspective on its mad claims and moral hideousness.


Meta =>When I say it works, I don't mean that it works as a fulfillment of Marx or Stalin or even Degaul. I mean it works on an idividual level as a transformative agent existentially. But you know, the only reason it isn't growing in America is about Americans are 90% identified with it anyway. It's got 2 bil people world wide, larger than any other group or religion except races, and it's growing in developing contries. It's not growing in Eruope because Eruopean notions of civliation have been jaded by two world wars, and the French wont let go of pop art, and the Italians refuse to try and remeber the Renaissance, and the Germans never did understand anything other than theology. Seperated from their theological roots all they offer is us cars and watches.




Not only are the actions of Jesus reflective of the divine in such enstances as forgiving the woman caught in adultery

Meta, you know this is a later invention...




Meta =>The whole point of my post was that this doesn't matter. Stop looking at the minutia and try for the big picture. Besides, I would like to you try and prove that is a latter addition.



That God would be willing to die for the sins of humanity and to die as one of the lowest in the social order demonstrates that God is on our side and is willing to identify with our lot, which is what solidarity is all about. Now never mind the fact that "it didn't hurt cause he was God" and silly arguments like that. The point is that it is a clear expression of God's willingness to identify with us

Quote:
Meta, this is an obscenity. The Christian obsession with death and pain is one of its most inhuman and evil aspects, an anti-solidarity. There is no solidarity in this death. Solidarity is created by shared social experience in pursuit of a positive and worthwhile goal.

Meta =>You don't think death is a shared experiece? We all die, how could God ignore death and pretend to be in solidarity? you speak of the brutality and horrors of human history and yet you can't face them. You can't accept the fact that this is a universal aspect of the human conditon. but you ignore the other side of the coin because you are determined not to look at belief in a positive light. There is also resurrection; and is the symbol of hope and future. It's a dialectic. God = thesis; Jesus = anti-thesis (because regjected by God) resurrection (by God) = synthesis, hope and future which we share in.







Quote:
It is not created by legends of a man-god who was was executed and then raised himself from the dead. No one has a human connection with that latter figure. Instead, they have an anti-human connection: worship, abasement, intolerance toward and destruction of others who do not believe as they do.

Meta =>Ah! so it's debasement you fear? you can't worhsip God because your ego is too great. that's an old story. But the part about intolerance is just plain bull. You simpley refuse to look at the great humanitarian things that christitians does and inspires, you prefur the negative. You would rather live in a negative world of hopelessness.







Quote:
Surely an omnipotent being who loved us could find a more constructive and progressive way of "showing solidarity" -- assuming that such a thing was even necessary. After all, gods can simply reveal themselves any time, in any way...


Meta =>total misunderstanding about the nature of the divine, of humanity and of logic and necessity. God is limited by our free will because our abliity to make moral choices outweighs everything else. So we are given that choicce, and that means we choose badly sometimes and need redeeption, which God offers out of pure Grace. Which you reject because you want a world of hopelessness. Stop dwelling on the negative and try looking at the light rather than quibbeling over the color of the glass!

Besies, atonement is the post positive thing God could do. how better to show his love than to actually die as a human in a horrible way? But that's not the end of it, he has victory over death, which we can share in and be risen too.


We screwed up the world. God gave us the choice and we chose to screw it up




Quote:
I admire your courage for posting here, but basically this is just rhetoric employed in defense of a brutal, inhuman, unethical and authoritarian belief that history has already dismissed as a failure.


Meta =>I'm sorry to insult you after you said you admire my courage, but I dont' admire your shallow, intolerant, narrowminded appraoch to theology. you've clealry never read any real theolgoians. You just snipe at the easy targets instead of taking on the real thinkers. But then it appears you don't even know about them. I dare say you've never heard of liberation theology or read a single major theolgoian, is that right?


that you think this sutff is just empty rhetoric shows how far out of the loop you are thoelgoically speaking. There's a whole world of books out there about which you clearly know noting; a whole tradition you've overlooked, but you prefur intolerance and prejudice to learning, that much is clear.
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Old 04-27-2003, 12:58 PM   #14
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Default Re: Why is Jesus historicity Important? Or, how I do apologetics

Metacrock:
All religions aspire to do three things:

1) to deliniate the Human problematic

2) To resolve the problematic with a trnasformative experience

3) To mediate the transformation.


And what makes Metacrock so sure of all that? He seems like he's projecting Metacrockianity on every religion there ever was.

I'd like to see if he can find those three features in Hellenic paganism, for example.

As I have said before, I believe that there is one universal experience of the Divine that stands behind all religions.

That's not saying much about the nature of that alleged divinity, since different religion differ very seriously about details.
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Old 04-27-2003, 01:08 PM   #15
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Also, Metacrock's celebration of existing forms of Xianity is rather curious, since its most aggressive and obnoxious forms are various fundamentalist sects, which are believers in the verbal, plenary inspiration of the Bible, as he puts it. So why is he so proud of believers in VP inspiration?

I much prefer the attitude of Robert M. Price, who is a practicing Episcopalian who believes that Jesus Christ was mostly mythical -- he likes the ceremony of the church.
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Old 04-27-2003, 01:16 PM   #16
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Arrow Re: Re: Why is Jesus historicity Important? Or, how I do apologetics

Quote:
Originally posted by Koyaanisqatsi
You mean something like this:


And let's not forget your ending:



Yeah, there's no deity involved in any of that carefully-worded-to-avoid-any-direct-links nonsense.


Meta =>I didn't say I don't have beliefs, or that I will not speak of what they are. I said I wouldn't argue for them based upon historical data of the NT kind Why do you feel that other people don't have the right to discuss their beliefs?


Quote:
Well, again you display how much you don't know, since if you'll recall in that thread, I granted you the existence of a Rabbi named Jesus and his collection of wisdom sayings that the mythology of the christian cult was loosely based upon.

And here you've taken it upon yourself to explain that you don't believe in the deity of Jesus at the same time you speak about the "transformative" effects of reading his words and how it "mediates transcendence through Grace."



Meta =>Where did I say I don't believe in the diety of Christ? How did you get that out of my post!?? I said I dont' believe in arguing for it Josh McDowell sytle



Quote:
Your evasions and obfuscation grow ever more transparent, sir, since absent a divinity of Jesus, he would just be yet another teacher like all other teachers throughout history (and a horrible one at that, since he didn't actually teach anything, he just threatened for non-compliance) and therefore no "transcendence through Grace" could be possible or [b]any person on this planet who ever says anything regarding a god or gods would ipso facto mean "transcendance through Grace."




Meta =>NOt being able to see the greatness in Jesus teachings is like not being able to see the greatness in Shakespire or Picasso. That's just an index to your mentality that you insist upon reading Bible passages in the worst possible light, and dmeand that a chilidishly litteralistic reading be made for the sole purpose of casting it in that bad light


You keep maintaining that the bible is the word of god which is no longer permissable for you to do.


Meta => Bull! that's only because you haven't the imagination or the theolgoical knowledge to read about any other model of inspiration but verbal plenary. There is a vast tradition. the guy who wrote the book i take my view of inspiration from is a Cardinal under JPII. You don't know what you are talking about.





Quote:
Sorry, I have decreed it and since I have been a teacher and certainly speak about god an awful lot, by reading my words you will receive "transcendence through Grace."



Meta =>ajhahahahahaha you what? ahahahahahhah O he's a teacher. Well we need some knowledge a bit more speicialzed than wood shop for this job.

Quote:
It's just as stupid and utterly baseless as what is written in your book.


Meta =>That does it! put him in the cumphy chiar!
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Old 04-27-2003, 01:24 PM   #17
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Arrow Atonement not Human Sacrafice

Quote:
Originally posted by Roland
We are so conditioned to accept Christianity that few of us ever stop to think about what it really is:

THE ONLY RELIGION STILL IN EXISTENCE THAT IS BASED ON THAT MOST BARBARIC OF RELIGIOUS CONCEPTS - A HUMAN SACRIFICE NEEDED TO APPEASE AN ANGRY GOD!

Meta => in theology of St Paulby D.E.H. Whiteley, it is argued that the atonement is not corrolated to the animal sacrafice of OT. It is not a sacrafice in that sense (and it doesnkt' make sense that they woud go backward from animals to people--most anthropologists assume that social evolutin moves from real human sacrafice to substituting animals).

IT's not a sacrafice in that sense but a statement of solidarity, a participation in and with humanity.
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Old 04-27-2003, 03:29 PM   #18
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Default Re: Re: Re: Why is Jesus historicity Important? Or, how I do apologetics

Quote:
Originally posted by Metacrock
Where did I say I don't believe in the diety of Christ? How did you get that out of my post!?? I said I dont' believe in arguing for it Josh McDowell sytle
But, apparently, you do believe in arguing for the historical Jesus "Josh McDowell style." Just look at that post full of collected quotes on how absurd it is to doubt the historical existence of Jesus.

Since the deity of Christ is an article of faith, why can't the humanity of Christ be an article of faith? Why is it important to be able to prove one but not the other?

After all, most Christians throughout history have not had resort to critical methodology or stratification of sources to underpin the historicity of Jesus.

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Peter Kirby
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Old 04-27-2003, 04:27 PM   #19
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Default Re: Willkommen!

Quote:
Originally posted by Ernest Sparks
Hello, All-But-Doctor H.

Welcome back to the mosh.

Here's hoping you have good control of your temper this ride. Just ignore those slings and arrows. Don't allow the distraction of explosions and counter-rolls to drown the impact of your message. You do have much to offer here.
Don't blow it with the moderators.

Yes, your theology in its full expansion fairly brims, absolutely oozes, with metaphor. One can only wish for somewhat more concision.

Best regards,
ES

people: don't bug him about spelling- OK?

Happy Low Sunday to our Catholics!

well thanks ES. I thought I was pretty concrete about it all in those other threads.
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Old 04-27-2003, 04:29 PM   #20
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Quote:
Originally posted by B. H. Manners
I'm from Texas, and a WHOLE lot of folks are aware of what he said. they just don't want to cause "family trouble" by coming out and saying it openly.

I'm from Texas too. Where are these aware people? I'd like to meet them.
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